Thursday, January 15, 2015

The Real Scandals of the Paris March

He reviews the nauseating spectacle of terrorist Mahmoud Abbas at the Paris rally-can you imagine how hard Abbas and his fellow terrorists were laughing about that gig? They are all laughing in our faces.

Plus, the despicable French and how much tolerance they showed to Jews being murdered.

"In 2012, to take just one example, a jihadist killed 7 people,
including 3 Jewish children, in Toulouse and Montauban. Why did those
deaths not merit a large display of “solidarity” and multicultural
togetherness? Some will argue that the Charlie Hebdo killings deserve more attention because they struck at a foundational belief of liberal democracy, free speech. Indeed it did.

"But killing Jewish children just because they are Jews strikes at
equally foundational beliefs––that all people have human rights whatever
their race or creed, and that confessional tolerance is mandatory for
an open and free society. Yes, the latest massacre also killed 4 Jews
just because they were Jews, but those victims of the violent assault on
our principles have been an afterthought. Passionate proclamations of
the importance of free speech? Heard a lot those. Equally passionate
calls to fight anti-Semitism? Not so much. Perhaps some people have some
residual decency, and are embarrassed at being reminded that just 6
months ago, these same streets of Paris were filled with protestors
marching in support of Hamas, vandalizing synagogues, and shouting
anti-Semitic and genocidal slogans."

"Killing Jews or cops in the provinces is one thing, but left-wing
journalists in the City of Lights? Now that’s a cause for outrage. Roger
Kimball got it right when he wrote, “The whole production is slightly
nauseating in its fakeness, its self-aggrandizing narcissism, and its
essential mendacity.”

And finally and this is the G-d's honest truth of the matter:

"The rot in the West, its failure of cultural nerve and collapse of
civilizational morale, will not be stopped by big talk and displays of
communal emotion."

Neither the pen, or a dishonest and pathetic public demonstration, is mightier at the moment, than the jihadist's sword.